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20:00
@Pheonixblade9 oh yeah, once they've got you, you're guaranteed care. Difficulty is getting them to acknowledge what the problem is
I don't like the JS components - strange source code on most of them (hipster code)
Productivity in programming is often based on the level of abstraction a language and library provide, if you have to write the lower levels of abstraction, such as writing your own combo box, you lose productivity compared to as if this was provided for you.
@rlemon libraries are for people who don't want to waste their time reinventing the wheel - you just have to understand the wheel you're using, and acknowledge the fact that there are bad libraries
most are bad.
large toolkits are unneeded - find smaller specific libraries for your task
@rlemon that's like saying "most programming languages are bad"
20:01
how does Bootstrap compare to dojo?
@Pheonixblade9 no its not, its the people that use them ;)
/build them
@KyleTrauberman I did not know that could happen in practice.
A LOT of the uses of current js libraries in fact hurt the developer using them because they are overly abstracted and don't follow the conventions / syntax of the underlying abstraction methods.
same with the shims
@Pheonixblade9 you're entitled by statute to see a specialist within 18 weeks, on threat of fines and disciplinary action. Then the specialist spends ten minutes ignoring everything you say and you're booked a follow-up at some indeterminate time in the future. Unless you've discovered the special fast-track system. The special fast-track system consists of a tick-box marked "Cancer? Y/N". If Y, you get to see the specialist within 2 weeks.
20:02
so debugging becomes as laborsome as writing the components yourself.
Finding smaller libraries to complete your task is nice, but they will lack a coherent interface and usually have a lower level of support, often they get abandoned or have dependencies on a library your not using (prototype, jquery, etc)
@TomW sounds like a problem with the doctors, not the system
if you want a UI library then Twitter Bootstrap css is good. VERY customizable.
@Pheonixblade9 really? I'd say the opposite. The doctors are very good at their job, and their word is law - but their time is rationed by the system
Nothing like the feeling of starting a new project with NO BAD CODE. Ahhhhhh
20:03
I'll consider bootstrap, i haven't evaluated it before.
@TomW you just said they spend 10 minutes ignoring you :P
jQuery UI is shit. I'm sorry, I've read the source. it really really is
jQuery Mobile is even worse
jQuery source is not bad - 90% of the plugins and designers who use it are.
just for the record (I bash jQuery a lot, but this is the honest to god reason why)
is there a shortcut for collapsing solution tree in studio?
@Pheonixblade9 most people have no capacity to say anything useful during that meeting. The doctor is primarily concerned with reading the patient's notes and verifying that they're true, because they aren't given any time to do that beforehand
@JohanLarsson Alt+F4
20:04
hehehehe
Well the current system im working on has Jquery UI inherited, we may be doing a rewrite at some point
(actually tried it) can confirm
Seriously though, there's a button that's 3 stacked boxes with a - in it. Try that
Hahaha
20:05
@Greg ouch. I did try to use it for a while. same with mobile - then while figuring out why it didn't work I dug deep into the source code and my jaw dropped - so gave up and pressed my own stuff - then like ~6 months later Bootstrap was introduced to me
idk if any of y'all have any room to complain - we're still using an ASP WEB SITE. As in, not even WPF or anything like that
jQuery UI might have improved in the past year but I doubt it (much) - Mobile still looks like the POS it was back then (+ fixes of course)
as in, physically impossible to get a unit testing framework to work with it
@Pheonixblade9 ASP as in classic?
@TomW yeah
20:07
2 hours after @rlemon's , looks at clock... 3:06 PM...
as in 2005
o_O twitch
wow. I think our university records portal was written in classic asp. It was garbage.
just left button seems to work, begin from bottom
@rlemon Jquery UI hasn't changed much from 1.8 to 1.9. Bootstrap looks decent, but looks like its widgets are about as limited in number as jQuery UI.
20:07
Yeah. All the new stuff I write as web services with a one-liner return call
@Greg what about YUI?
@Greg what do you need? and what do you need to support
We use YUI 2.0 here and it's decent
@KendallFrey I've been home for three hours. Currently enjoying quite a nice single malt. Maybe soon I'll have a late dinner. Life is good.
really good documentation
20:08
Rlemon, mostly just forms, datagrids / restjsonstore / databinding, comboxes, that sort of thing
And good event binding for changes to UI elements
@zneak ever read The Forever War?
nope
event binding for UI changes is a fallacy - you should be triggering the handler when you change the UI element :P you control reflow
does anyone else thing jquery is too big?
I did like the restJsonStore in Dojo, was pretty nice despite bad docs.
20:09
and feels like bloat
@zneak I won't spoil the ending, because you should experience the fail for yourself, but it's kind of like that
I prefer my ui element to trigger its own onChange and update the datastore based on changes.
lol
It is less code
but the code is somewhere - lol
20:10
Its somewhere but i don't have to write it.
that is like "jQuery allows for less code, look I did this in 90 lines" (ignores the 9000 lines of jQuery)
@rlemon the code isn't somewhere. That implies some faraway location. It isn't - it's very precisely on the wire between your server and your user's.
Thats fine. If someone else supports the code, and they support it well, that is great.
Look at .NET, huge amounts of code, but i don't have to support it or write it.
I'm just saying - you want 2/90 modules from a library - don't take the library - especially if the entire thing needs to be taken by the client.
but this is the web, totally different monster.
20:12
Dojo uses AMD as i understand
Dojo is descent at that.
moo tools as well I hear
But dojo isn't well supported and the community is small
I tend to stray away from any libs, and It hasn't hindered me yet. I wrote my own utils.js file and plug in that - took me maybe two days to write it (+ learning how to write it and why it should be written said way) but I don't have to worry anymore because it's there and I understand it
@rlemon you should open source your utils file
Thats good, but other developers are going to have to learn it, and your company is going to have to support it for internal use.
20:13
Check out this awesome script:
fade_in, fade_out, face_to, bind_handler, unbind_handler, etc..
@KyleTrauberman just thinking that same thing
It's all downhill from here...
@Greg no they only need support JavaScript :P
20:14
j/w, what's to stop you hacking out the bits of [random js lib] that you want and throwing away the rest?
@TomW jQuery tightly couples itself. you always need the core for some shim and util functions
nothing is completely modular
@rlemon FFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU
@rlemon If you have a JS library that your company uses, they have to support that library to continue using it if bugs arise etc if its a custom library
it's not a library - it's a util toolkit
if they want to swap it out for jQuery later on or anything else they only need to alias the functions
i consider a util toolkit a library.
20:15
a few years ago I had a web class, and we had to design a chat client for some protocol the teacher made up using ajax
could you not build a completely modular library??
libraries generally need to include multiple parts to function - toolkits (in theory) should be able to grab any one component and run with it while leaving the rest
@rlemon Ah, that is a good practice, coding to interface.
to test if we were protected against xss, our teacher had a script that would "flush" your page
literally make it twist and disappear like in a toilet bowl
lol
20:16
I'd like to see an API definition in JS that doesn't use any particular framework, but instead provides mappings to other frameworks.
Sort of like J2EE, but not so convoluted
we had a work-experience kid a year or so ago, he was a unit. He was like 15 - and on a project the boss gave him he actually wrote some quite sophisticated defences against SMTP injection - I'd never even HEARD of SMTP injection, and his mentor only knew of it from a book back in network security lectures
If you really engulf yourself into the js community of purists you will see that the language is there - just not adopted - the functionality is there (for anything these libs provide) just not adopted - we shouldn't be trying to abstract this away or reinvent js with pre-compilers / libraries - we should be putting pressure on the browser vendors to implement the standards and features as specified (and in a timely mannor)
and when I say language, I mean a few parts - but MOSTLY the APIs
is that like injecting headers into an email by putting \r\n in the subject line?
Canvas/ File / xhr2 / Audio / Video / etc.
@zneak absolutely no idea whatsoever
20:19
I'd like to see MS bind its browser to the .net library, it would be really funny.
dataset being adopted by IE will be wicked awesome
but he'd read about it, understood it, and coded against it, and he was 15
!!/google SMTP Injection
well, I guess it would be possible to do it
20:20
not sure what you'd gain by doing SMTP injection though
imagine if IE allowed you to make calls to .NET libraries like System.Speech.Recognition through the JS console?
kinda does
activeX + com interop provides almost everything
I haven't looked at JScript in a while. is there any tie ins there?
Hmm, does that stuff execute client side though?
not sure - back in the day I remember you could do some ASP.NET voodoo with COM interop
Is it just me or is there a formatting problem here: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms742542.aspx
20:27
it's a new feature to make identifiers more visible!
Hmmm, thats not a formatting problem, thats a formatting solution!
@KendallFrey *an hour later rlemon looks at the clock.... 3:26PM -
@zneak you know what im talking about.
MS you slay me :P
every Black could have saved one byte by using #000
@rlemon oh the audacity.
20:34
i know right.
what people
Paul Irish complained that lememe doesn't have IMPACT font
got to love when design websites dont have a proper responsive layout yet preaches all about it :/
I suppose I should give him Impact
You should, if your going to support memes, you should do it right.
is it just me that finds the nuget gui in VS2010 slow?
@Greg I need to self host this badly
no github, and option to choose a image hosting service (me, imgur, other)
and a tonne more options
I'm lazy
20:37
@TomW sometimes yes
@StuartBlackler for me, always. Search is dog-slow all the time
hosting local nuget packages is pretty cool if you've not tried that
@StuartBlackler I have. We've got a house server that I've pushed packages to. Not used it as a private server to myself though, which is what I think you mean
both the same thing really :)
20:41
well @rlemon, someone did not like your Lorem Ipsum alternatives
I found the nuget docs not particularly helpful
@zneak teresko
just discovered the ruler in chrome, thats pretty cool
I think the Y U NO meme is my favourite
20:44
^ useful plugin (colour picker)
that and WHAR X? WHAR?
@rlemon you're rubbing shoulders with the big wigs
It appears so
can jQuery(".class").attr('id','someRandomId'); jQuery('someRandomId').jqGrid({...}); cause a race condition, essentially if jqGrid is called before the the element is updated in the dom, or will the dom block until its the attr is updated?
ugh. why are you setting the attr (attr is almost always the wrong place to set, hence the ugh)
do you want to read it later as a property?
20:50
because i need a random ID because this is a template, and jqGrid requires an id.
attribute === state data
property === mapped attributes to live data on the DOM element
<div id="foo" name="bar"></div>
var elm = document.getElementById('foo');
elm.name = "bazzz";
console.log(elm.getAttribute('name')); // "bar"
console.log(elm.name); // "bazzz"
why is attr the wrong place to set it?
make sense?
it will work but you'd be better off setting the property and not causing reflow on it
IIRC changing an attribute triggers reflow
changing a property that does not trigger reflow does not :P
jQuery(".class").prop('id','someRandomId'); jQuery('someRandomId').jqGrid({...});
so like so?
yes
20:57
Anyway, it still give me the same problem
but horrible at the same time :P unless the string randomID will truly be random for each element
it is
$('.class').each(function(element, index) {
    this.id = "id_" + index;
    $(this).jqGrid({});
});
var uniqueNumber = Utility.random.string();

var grid = "jqgrid_" + uniqueNumber;
var pager = "jqgrid_pager_" + uniqueNumber;
jQuery( this.formIdJquery + " .jqgrid").prop('id', grid );
jQuery( this.formIdJquery + " .jqgrid-pager").prop('id', pager );
but it is setting the same string to every item with that class
is there more than one item with that class?
20:59
no, its namespaced into the form id
.jqgrid exists in several<div id="someuniqueformid"></div>
But i think its a bug that jqgrid requires the user to put an id on the table instead of just putting its own or using a reference to itself. The jqgrid developers think this is a feature.
I'm just confused here by your id values :P you do not have duplicate ID values do you?
have you checked with your inspector?
hrm. I don't use jqgrid
jQuery( this.formIdJquery + " .jqgrid").prop('id', grid ); //This gets all .jqgrids in the form with id formIdJquery
There is only one .jqgrid in this form
Forms are loaded by ajax request with a unique id, so by searching only in that forms div, there will be only one .jqgrid class. It will ignore .jqgrid in other forms
And if jqgrid was coded right, i wouldn't even have to have an id on the grids.
my god, it's full of javascript
daisy, daisy....
anyway, i think it may have been a problem with the strings i was generating, it was working intermittently. The strings were base64. Changing to a number string has it working 100% i think.
I don't know what I'm more excited about... Star Wars 7... or Vader vs Sepheroth in the Kindom Hearts...
21:13
they making a kingdom hearts 2?
star wars 7....how easily could that be a massive pile of garbage....
very easily
they should definitely get denis lawson back in, he's realistically priced (c.f. Ford), doesn't look like a Hutt these days (c.f. Fisher) and isn't hideously mutilated (c.f. Hamill)
and he actually acts, still
nobody remembers denis lawson, but a large part of the EU is about him
(Wedge Antilles)
I bet Patrick Stewart is happy that his role as Professor Xavier has eclipsed his role in Star Trek
Yeah, now he has a different class of nerds hounding him.
I think he put more of his stones into playing Picard than he did to Xavier
Xavier #nvr4get
Perhaps, but i think I'd rather have the x-man fan base than the star trek fan base.
21:22
a lot of TNG was garbage but a few of them shone, mostly the ones where Stewart was allowed to do what he wanted
and I think he developed the character himself, they started off wooden because the writing and script were terrible, he then built the character into a person who seems that way because of his interpersonal issues and attitude to the job
I think some of the best TNG was when Q was allowed to go Crazy
Feels like I've been at work my whole life. #Ineedmorepot
@KendallFrey are you doing things that aren't coding?
Nope, not even.
21:37
Strange. Writing code is usually fairly interesting, even on a shitty day
it's all the other stuff that's soul-sucking
debugging is soul sucking. Debugging legacy code.
Actually, it's not that bad. It just seems like I've been here forever.
@KendallFrey i'll happily swap places at the moment ha!
What time is it there?
21:41
wonders where the time has gone
21:42
It's 9:41 and you want to work???
better than building this silly network on packet tracer ha
I HATE HATE HATE HATE the MSDN docs for wscript.
10... more... minutes...
anyone know how to subnet ipv6?
22:08
looks like not
no unfortunately
oh well there is always food :)
oh fuck, that
:O
you not like food?
no, notice the position of the comma
ahhh my bad
22:16
in @rlemon's absence, I'm the new owner of the bot
!!/norris
@KyleTrauberman Chuck Norris does not "style" his hair. It lays perfectly in place out of sheer terror.
!!/norris
@TomW Someone once tried to tell Chuck Norris that roundhouse kicks aren't the best way to kick someone. This has been recorded by historians as the worst mistake anyone has ever made.
NORRIS Y U NO WORK
oh.
Is it me.. or are some of the concepts in Node.js are quite similar to ASP MVC?
E.g. Request Handlers, similar to Actions
22:23
@LewsTherin If I have an idea and you have an idea and we exchange ideas, we each have two ideas
I'm kinda missing your point..
why the riddle?
Point: It's entirely appropriate that Node.js and ASP.NET MVC have features that seem quite similar
they probably read the same blogs
The UPS guy is taunting me. If I'm not home early, he arrives at like 2:30 and decides he needs a signature. If I do get home early, he doesn't show until after 5.
22:31
@Billdr that's why I have everything delivered to the office.
if you trust your neighbors I think its possible to leave a note telling him that it is ok to leave it by the door, you probably have to call an clear it
Fedex et al really sux for home deliveries
I signed up for their special "You don't need a signature ever" program. They just selectively decide when to apply it.
I hate UPS, they have screwed me many times
once they refused to deliver an overnight package because a small company was striking at my work.
@Pheonixblade9 I should start doing that. It's used to be easier for me to get stuff at home, but since I moved it's become very unpredictable.
A small company affiliated with your company?
ugh, its only 3:30
22:35
...why aren't these trucks GPS enabled yet?! /complaining
your new rig isn't there yet?
This does not make sense in this world
why do all shipping companies suck?
Not yet.
and they all suck because all the things they do make life worse for them as well as you, and it makes absolutely no sense
posted on November 08, 2012 by Scott Hanselman

How can you not love a tiny computer? I posted about Top 10 Raspberry Pi Myths and Truths and since then I'm up to four Raspberry Pi devices. The most recent is the new Raspberry Pi "Model B" that includes 512 megs of RAM. Sure, Raspberry Pis aren't fast, but what they lack in performance they make up for with chutzpah. They have a nice GPU as well which will decode 1080p MP4 vide

22:37
here's a solution: all shipping tags should have a gps and cell data enabled chip that lets you track your package in real time.
@KyleTrauberman what difference would that make?
make it detect jarring motion too, so you can know if you should expect damage
you know your package isn't where it's supposed to be now.
also moisture
that didn't change anything
22:38
and temperature
I'd rather pay for that device than shipping insurance.
so you can know the conditions of your item during its whole journey
the buyer has no control over the choice of shipping - and the vendor doesn't care
@KyleTrauberman how does that help make shipping good?
it doesn't
it just makes it cooler
It could also make companies liable for the package.
Why they're not already is a goddamn mystery to me.
22:45
here's an idea
if consumers stop picking online shopping based wholly on shipping price, the situation might improve
presumably large retailers sign exclusive contracts with horrible shipping companies who then don't have to try
better idea: invent teleporter shipping.
here's an ultimatum - offer a selection, or don't get custom. How do we, the community, force them to do that?
Better idea: invent star-trek's replicator technology.
or have Maker-Bot be higher res and cheaper.
mmmmmmm star trek.
possibly related: DPD drivers are the worst i've ever seen
22:49
DPD?
desktop printing devices?
I think it's Deutsche Post
possibly no longer connected to them
no idea how their parcels show up,. but their drivers are the worst on the road I've ever seen
that could work in cities^^
Oh, drivers as in people, not drivers as in software used to communicate with hardware. I was confused.
I was in a factory that had a system like that, it was really cool
lol at physical network routing
22:53
did not find a real life vid. It is not too far fetched?
click buy on a couple of beers and 34 seconds later they arrive
Don't these things have weight limits?
probably
I lol'd at the tube that is only big enough to pass documents around going by computers.
@Billdr It could replace email? Value type!
I'd like to see one big enough to deliver a fast food meal. There's currently too much human interaction in that experience.
22:58
I guess we will see it in Tokyo first
your guys remember my rant about singletons earlier?
I just changed something deep in the game and now the main menu won't show up
@Billdr grocerygateway.com not quite, but still awesome if you work from home or have a stay at home spouse
My local grocer delivers, I guess. I'm just trying to avoid actually seeing the gross bastards that touch my food at McDonalds.

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